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Sequencing.com Launches Free Genetic Analysis To Assess Risk And Severity Of Coronavirus Infection For Each Individual – P&T Community

March 20th, 2020 8:46 pm

LOS ANGELES, March 19, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- Sequencing.com, the world's largest online marketplace for DNA services, today launched a first-of-its-kind genetic analysis called the Coronavirus DNA Health Report that can quickly assess each user's individual risk of coronavirus infection and the likely severity of reaction to the virus, including the risks of serious illness or death.

Dr. Brandon Colby, Founder of Sequencing.com, said, "The coronavirus outbreak is not the first public health crisis our global society has faced in recent decades, but for the first time ever, through our Coronavirus DNA Health Report, genetic diagnostics and analysis are available that enable each individual to determine his or her likely level of infection risk and the severity of outcomes for the infected. From there, our Coronavirus DNA Health Report provides specific lifestyle and health insights that maximize prevention and preparedness."

The analysis behind the Coronavirus DNA Health Report is based on peer-reviewed, published research on coronavirus. Though preliminary, that body of research has identified specific genetic markers in a portion of the infected population that are associated with susceptibility to coronavirus infection as well as the potential impact upon health if infected.

The Coronavirus DNA Health Report Provides Actionable Guidance

Aside from evaluating users' coronavirus risks, the Coronavirus DNA Health Report delivers personalized, actionable guidance based on each person's DNA. A person who the Coronavirus DNA Health Report indicates may have a greater risk of a severe infection would be armed with vital information to take proactive, preventive measures. Higher risk individuals, for example, could be more aggressive about social distancing and could also ensure any medical conditions, such as high blood pressure and diabetes, are closely monitored and well controlled.

"For anyone who may come in contact with the virus, knowing whether they are at risk for a severe infection can be a crucial piece of information that empowers them to make decisions on how to best protect themselves," Dr. Colby said. "Sometimes even the smallest lifestyle changes can have a significant impact on a person's wellbeing."

While Sequencing.com's Coronavirus DNA Health Report is not a test for the presence of the virus, it can be used in the context of other non-genetic factors to assess a user's risk for infection and the how sick they are likely to get if they catch the virus. Sequencing.com will continuously update the analysis process that generates the report as more is learned about the virus causing the current outbreak.

Free Versions of the Coronavirus DNA Health Report Available

Sequencing.com is offering free versions of the Coronavirus DNA Health Report for users who have already taken a DNA test, either through the company's own sequencing service or through popular, commercially available third-party services such as 23andMe and AncestryDNA. For users who have not yet taken a DNA test, the company offers a $69 DNA test as well as clinical-grade Whole Genome Sequencing for $399.

Once the user's DNA data is stored in the person's account at Sequencing.com, it takes about 10 minutes to generate the Coronavirus DNA Health Report.

The Coronavirus DNA Health Report is one of more than 90 applications and services on Sequencing.com that analyze DNA data and provide insights to empower users to make more informed choices about their health, nutrition and overall wellness. The applications can use data from practically any DNA test including widely available genetic testing services.

Dr. Colby concluded, "Right now, there are more questions about coronavirus than there are answers, including why some infections appear mild while others can require more intensive medical care and hospitalization.Our Coronavirus DNA Health Report uses the information in each individual's DNA to provide actionable answers. We view our Coronavirus DNA Health Report as a reflection of our broader mission of utilizing the latest genetic technologies to help individuals outsmart their genes and live longer, healthier lives."

About Sequencing.com

Sequencing.com was founded in 2014 by Dr. Brandon Colby, an expert, entrepreneur and author in the field of personal genomics. Prior to founding the company, Dr. Colby practiced personalized preventive medicine in Los Angeles. Sequencing.com leverages the accessibility and falling costs of genetic testing to provide analysis and useful, straightforward guidance to users who are seeking to unlock the information in their DNA to live healthier, happier, longer lives.

Sequencing.com's HIPAA and GDPR compliant platform provides safe, confidential storage of a person's genetic data while also providing access to the world's largest marketplace of DNA analysis apps and reports. Sequencing.com's App Market includes more than 90 DNA analysis apps that empower individuals and healthcare professionals to be able to easily tap into genetic data for deep and rich insights. Powered by Universal Genetic Data Compatibility, apps available through Sequencing.com can process genetic data from any genetic test including Ancestry, 23andMe, MyHeritage, exome sequencing and whole genome sequencing.

For those who haven't yet taken a DNA test, Sequencing.com also offers DNA testing for $69 and clinical-grade 30x Whole Genome Sequencing for $399. Sequencing.com is the one-stop-shop that collates and organizes available genetic-based apps and genetic tests into the world's largest App Store for DNA. For more information, please visit https://sequencing.com.

Sequencing.com is backed by Mucker Capital, a leading Los Angeles-based venture capital firm specializing in investments in early-stage software and Internet-based businesses.

About Mucker Capital

Mucker Capital invests in seed and "pre-seed" stage companies building defensible and scalable Internet software and services businesses outside Silicon Valley. The firm partners with exceptional entrepreneurs to provide their earliest institutional funding and works with them side-by-side to help launch and scale their new ventures. It is Mucker's conviction that it must provide more than just capital. As operators and entrepreneurs themselves, Mucker's partners roll up their sleeves and work with entrepreneurs in all parts of their businesses that need additional resources - product development, customer development, business development, operational infrastructure, recruiting and fundraising.

Media Contacts

Joseph Kuo / Andrew WangHaven Tower Group424 317 4851 or 424 317 4859jkuo@haventower.comor awang@haventower.com

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Genomind Launches Express Ship-to-Patient Capability for Genomind Professional PGx Express Test Enabling Access to Critical Mental Health Treatment…

March 20th, 2020 8:46 pm

KING OF PRUSSIA, Pa.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Genomind, the leading mental health company bringing precision medicine into mainstream mental health treatment, today announced that it is offering an Express Ship-to-Patient option for its flagship product, Genomind Professional PGx Express, the most advanced and comprehensive mental health pharmacogenetic testing service. This test is designed to empower clinicians and pharmacists with genetic guidance to personalize patients treatment plans and reduce the painful process of mental health medication trial and error. Upon a clinician ordering Genomind Professional PGx Express, the new service upgrade enables patients to receive the test at home, with the healthcare provider receiving the results quickly and without requiring the patient to travel to a clinicians office or a lab. Genomind has activated their Express Ship-to-Patient service for all clinicians and is paying for the express shipping to meet the needs of mental health patients during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The travel limitations placed on our lives by the coronavirus pandemic require us to provide innovative solutions to help patients and healthcare providers, particularly during this time of intensified mental health strain, said Shawn Patrick OBrien, Chief Executive Officer at Genomind. I am very proud of my team for being able to bring forward the rollout of this Express Ship-to-Patient solution to address the current reality of the mental health treatment landscape. We look forward to working with our team, our providers, and alongside companies all over the world to do what we can to support those who need it during this global health crisis. Our patients mental health cant wait.

Genominds pharmacogenetic (PGx) testing identifies patient-specific genetic markers that can indicate which treatments have lower risk for side effects or adverse events and may be more likely to be effective. It can also provide guidance for specific dosages based on an individuals pharmacokinetic profile. The FDA has placed gene-specific warnings, precautions, drug interaction guidelines and dosage recommendations on over 270 medications.

Under the new offering, physicians can order the test and Genomind will expedite shipping of the test kit to the address provided by the patient. Patients will follow instructions to provide a sample via a simple cheek swab and return it to Genominds lab for processing. With all required information, the laboratory can turn around results in less than three days the fastest turnaround time in the industry and a results report is then delivered to the physician. Genomind is also supporting this new service with On-Demand test consults with its team of pharmacogenomic experts to provide insights and support to physicians in interpreting test results.

"During this time of uncertainly and instability, our mental health patients need us more than ever, said Gisoo Zarrabi, M.D. Medical Director of Harbor Psychiatry & Mental Health. The Genomind Express direct-to-patient service has already proven itself invaluable to our practice and has allowed us to continue practicing psychiatry to the highest standard possible. We are thankful that our patients will continue to benefit from these essential reports not just today, but for the rest of their lives.

For more information, connect at Genomind.com.

About Genomind Professional PGx Express (PGx Express)

Genomind Professional PGx Express, available by prescription, is the most advanced mental health genetic testing service available, analyzing variants on up to 24 genes selected for inclusion based on guidelines from expert consortia peer-reviewed studies due to their significance in mental health. Test results include information on patients genetic variants that are relevant for the treatment of conditions such as depression, anxiety, autism, schizophrenia, chronic pain, bipolar disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and substance abuse.

Genomind Professional PGx Express bundles the test results with a suite of services, including:

About GenomindGenomind is the leading mental health care company delivering the genetic testing tools that empower clinicians to make more informed treatment decisions and create better outcomes for patients with mental illnesses. As the scientific leader in genetic testing, Genominds flagship offering is Genomind Professional PGx Express the most advanced and comprehensive mental health genetic service available. Supported by a world-class genetics lab and unique consultative approach, Genomind is advancing a new paradigm of personalized medicine in mental health care. Learn more at http://www.genomind.com.

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When will a coronavirus vaccine be ready? – The Guardian

March 20th, 2020 8:46 pm

Even at their most effective and draconian containment strategies have only slowed the spread of the respiratory disease Covid-19. With the World Health Organization finally declaring a pandemic, all eyes have turned to the prospect of a vaccine, because only a vaccine can prevent people from getting sick.

About 35 companies and academic institutions are racing to create such a vaccine, at least four of which already have candidates they have been testing in animals. The first of these produced by Boston-based biotech firm Moderna will enter human trials imminently.

This unprecedented speed is thanks in large part to early Chinese efforts to sequence the genetic material of Sars-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19. China shared that sequence in early January, allowing research groups around the world to grow the live virus and study how it invades human cells and makes people sick.

But there is another reason for the head start. Though nobody could have predicted that the next infectious disease to threaten the globe would be caused by a coronavirus flu is generally considered to pose the greatest pandemic risk vaccinologists had hedged their bets by working on prototype pathogens. The speed with which we have [produced these candidates] builds very much on the investment in understanding how to develop vaccines for other coronaviruses, says Richard Hatchett, CEO of the Oslo-based nonprofit the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (Cepi), which is leading efforts to finance and coordinate Covid-19 vaccine development.

Coronaviruses have caused two other recent epidemics severe acute respiratory syndrome (Sars) in China in 2002-04, and Middle East respiratory syndrome (Mers), which started in Saudi Arabia in 2012. In both cases, work began on vaccines that were later shelved when the outbreaks were contained. One company, Maryland-based Novavax, has now repurposed those vaccines for Sars-CoV-2, and says it has several candidates ready to enter human trials this spring. Moderna, meanwhile, built on earlier work on the Mers virus conducted at the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases in Bethesda, Maryland.

Sars-CoV-2 shares between 80% and 90% of its genetic material with the virus that caused Sars hence its name. Both consist of a strip of ribonucleic acid (RNA) inside a spherical protein capsule that is covered in spikes. The spikes lock on to receptors on the surface of cells lining the human lung the same type of receptor in both cases allowing the virus to break into the cell. Once inside, it hijacks the cells reproductive machinery to produce more copies of itself, before breaking out of the cell again and killing it in the process.

All vaccines work according to the same basic principle. They present part or all of the pathogen to the human immune system, usually in the form of an injection and at a low dose, to prompt the system to produce antibodies to the pathogen. Antibodies are a kind of immune memory which, having been elicited once, can be quickly mobilised again if the person is exposed to the virus in its natural form.

Traditionally, immunisation has been achieved using live, weakened forms of the virus, or part or whole of the virus once it has been inactivated by heat or chemicals. These methods have drawbacks. The live form can continue to evolve in the host, for example, potentially recapturing some of its virulence and making the recipient sick, while higher or repeat doses of the inactivated virus are required to achieve the necessary degree of protection. Some of the Covid-19 vaccine projects are using these tried-and-tested approaches, but others are using newer technology. One more recent strategy the one that Novavax is using, for example constructs a recombinant vaccine. This involves extracting the genetic code for the protein spike on the surface of Sars-CoV-2, which is the part of the virus most likely to provoke an immune reaction in humans, and pasting it into the genome of a bacterium or yeast forcing these microorganisms to churn out large quantities of the protein. Other approaches, even newer, bypass the protein and build vaccines from the genetic instruction itself. This is the case for Moderna and another Boston company, CureVac, both of which are building Covid-19 vaccines out of messenger RNA.

Cepis original portfolio of four funded Covid-19 vaccine projects was heavily skewed towards these more innovative technologies, and last week it announced $4.4m (3.4m) of partnership funding with Novavax and with a University of Oxford vectored vaccine project. Our experience with vaccine development is that you cant anticipate where youre going to stumble, says Hatchett, meaning that diversity is key. And the stage where any approach is most likely to stumble is clinical or human trials, which, for some of the candidates, are about to get under way.

Clinical trials, an essential precursor to regulatory approval, usually take place in three phases. The first, involving a few dozen healthy volunteers, tests the vaccine for safety, monitoring for adverse effects. The second, involving several hundred people, usually in a part of the world affected by the disease, looks at how effective the vaccine is, and the third does the same in several thousand people. But theres a high level of attrition as experimental vaccines pass through these phases. Not all horses that leave the starting gate will finish the race, says Bruce Gellin, who runs the global immunisation programme for the Washington DC-based nonprofit, the Sabin Vaccine Institute.

There are good reasons for that. Either the candidates are unsafe, or theyre ineffective, or both. Screening out duds is essential, which is why clinical trials cant be skipped or hurried. Approval can be accelerated if regulators have approved similar products before. The annual flu vaccine, for example, is the product of a well-honed assembly line in which only one or a few modules have to be updated each year. In contrast, Sars-CoV-2 is a novel pathogen in humans, and many of the technologies being used to build vaccines are relatively untested too. No vaccine made from genetic material RNA or DNA has been approved to date, for example. So the Covid-19 vaccine candidates have to be treated as brand new vaccines, and as Gellin says: While there is a push to do things as fast as possible, its really important not to take shortcuts.

An illustration of that is a vaccine that was produced in the 1960s against respiratory syncytial virus, a common virus that causes cold-like symptoms in children. In clinical trials, this vaccine was found to aggravate those symptoms in infants who went on to catch the virus. A similar effect was observed in animals given an early experimental Sars vaccine. It was later modified to eliminate that problem but, now that it has been repurposed for Sars-CoV-2, it will need to be put through especially stringent safety testing to rule out the risk of enhanced disease.

Its for these reasons that taking a vaccine candidate all the way to regulatory approval typically takes a decade or more, and why President Trump sowed confusion when, at a meeting at the White House on 2 March, he pressed for a vaccine to be ready by the US elections in November an impossible deadline. Like most vaccinologists, I dont think this vaccine will be ready before 18 months, says Annelies Wilder-Smith, professor of emerging infectious diseases at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Thats already extremely fast, and it assumes there will be no hitches.

In the meantime, there is another potential problem. As soon as a vaccine is approved, its going to be needed in vast quantities and many of the organisations in the Covid-19 vaccine race simply dont have the necessary production capacity. Vaccine development is already a risky affair, in business terms, because so few candidates get anywhere near the clinic. Production facilities tend to be tailored to specific vaccines, and scaling these up when you dont yet know if your product will succeed is not commercially feasible. Cepi and similar organisations exist to shoulder some of the risk, keeping companies incentivised to develop much-needed vaccines. Cepi plans to invest in developing a Covid-19 vaccine and boosting manufacturing capacity in parallel, and earlier this month it put out a call for $2bn to allow it to do so.

Once a Covid-19 vaccine has been approved, a further set of challenges will present itself. Getting a vaccine thats proven to be safe and effective in humans takes one at best about a third of the way to whats needed for a global immunisation programme, says global health expert Jonathan Quick of Duke University in North Carolina, author of The End of Epidemics (2018). Virus biology and vaccines technology could be the limiting factors, but politics and economics are far more likely to be the barrier to immunisation.

The problem is making sure the vaccine gets to all those who need it. This is a challenge even within countries, and some have worked out guidelines. In the scenario of a flu pandemic, for example, the UK would prioritise vaccinating healthcare and social care workers, along with those considered at highest medical risk including children and pregnant women with the overall goal of keeping sickness and death ra tes as low as possible. But in a pandemic, countries also have to compete with each other for medicines.

Because pandemics tend to hit hardest those countries that have the most fragile and underfunded healthcare systems, there is an inherent imbalance between need and purchasing power when it comes to vaccines. During the 2009 H1N1 flu pandemic, for example, vaccine supplies were snapped up by nations that could afford them, leaving poorer ones short. But you could also imagine a scenario where, say, India a major supplier of vaccines to the developing world not unreasonably decides to use its vaccine production to protect its own 1.3 billion-strong population first, before exporting any.

Outside of pandemics, the WHO brings governments, charitable foundations and vaccine-makers together to agree an equitable global distribution strategy, and organisations like Gavi, the vaccine alliance, have come up with innovative funding mechanisms to raise money on the markets for ensuring supply to poorer countries. But each pandemic is different, and no country is bound by any arrangement the WHO proposes leaving many unknowns. As Seth Berkley, CEO of Gavi, points out: The question is, what will happen in a situation where youve got national emergencies going on?

This is being debated, but it will be a while before we see how it plays out. The pandemic, says Wilder-Smith, will probably have peaked and declined before a vaccine is available. A vaccine could still save many lives, especially if the virus becomes endemic or perennially circulating like flu and there are further, possibly seasonal, outbreaks. But until then, our best hope is to contain the disease as far as possible. To repeat the sage advice: wash your hands.

This article was amended on 19 March 2020. An earlier version incorrectly stated that the Sabin Vaccine Institute was collaborating with the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (Cepi) on a Covid-19 vaccine.

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How far should genetic engineering go to allow this couple to have a healthy baby? – Brisbane Times

March 20th, 2020 8:46 pm

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One morning in 2005, Shelley Beverley woke up to find that she had gone deaf. She was 21, and living in Johannesburg with her older brother Neil. I was very scared, she says. It was just so sudden. She struggled through the rest of the day, hoping that her hearing would come back, but it didnt. In one sense, her hearing loss wasnt entirely a surprise: Beverleys grandmother had been deaf, Neil had lost his hearing when he was 13, and her mum, Mary, had lost hers when she was 32. We knew it ran in the family, she says, but I thought Id been lucky and not inherited it.

Beverley, 35, lives in Margate, a semi-rural district south of Hobart, with her husband James. The couple migrated to Australia from South Africa in 2010, looking for space, buying 2 hectares of lush green grass at the foot of a forested ridge near the mouth of the Derwent River. We love the wildlife here, says James, looking out the living room window. Weve seen pademelons, echidnas, quolls, blue-tongue lizards, even a Tassie devil. At dusk, hundreds of kangaroos emerge from the forest to gorge on the grass. Its very peaceful, says James. Its really helped us after everything thats happened.

Apart from their deafness, Beverleys family had largely enjoyed good health. Then, in September 2015, her mother, Mary, then 62, started experiencing fatigue and stomach pain. Doctors in Durban ordered a colonoscopy, but the procedure made her worse. Her feet became swollen and purple. Because of their hearing problems, Shelley and Mary had communicated mainly in text messages. But soon I began noticing that her wording got a bit funny, says Beverley. It didnt always make sense.

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Beverley flew to Durban in February 2016, but by that time her mother could no longer talk or walk. She was so weak that she couldnt move her hands or lift her neck. Two days after Beverley arrived in Durban, her mother caught a virus that caused fluid to build up on her lungs. The doctors tried unsuccessfully to drain it. Shortly afterwards, she died. She weighed just 36 kilograms. It was so fast, Beverley says. And we were still in the dark about what she had.

Shortly before Marys death, Neil had also fallen ill. He developed a number of mysterious symptoms, including facial twitches and seizures. He kept falling over and tripping, and experienced vomiting and headaches so severe he lost his vision for weeks at a time. His behaviour became strange showering with his clothes on, and hallucinating.

One day, Dad was driving him around and Neil started talking to all these little people he thought were around his feet, says Beverley. Doctors in Durban had trouble diagnosing him, so they sent a biopsy to London, where he was found to have a type of mitochondrial cytopathy one of a large family of chronic and progressive diseases that affect the muscles, brain and nervous system. As the family soon learnt, the condition has no cure and no effective therapies. One of the common early symptoms is hearing loss.

Neil died in June 2017, aged 34, by which time Beverley had discovered she also had the condition. It was fear, so much fear, she says. She began experiencing symptoms, including migraines and vision loss. She has since developed diabetes, hypertension, gastro-paresis (when your stomach muscles dont work), and pharyngeal dysphagia (difficulty swallowing). Every time I get sick now, the flu or something, I think, When am I going to need a wheelchair or a feeding tube? When will my legs stop working?

Mito has taken everything from me, she says. If I die, at least James will still have a part of me.

Beverley has bright blue eyes and long, straight, ash-brown hair. Shes got a lazy left eye and uncommonly pale skin, which she attributes to her condition. Oh, and I had bunions out in 2010, she says, laughing wryly.

She doesnt know how long shes got left, but she is determined to make it count. She has joined mito awareness groups, and is an active member of the Mito Foundation, which supports sufferers, and funds research. She has exhaustively researched the condition and takes every opportunity to educate doctors. Youd be surprised by how little they know about it, she says.

But her overriding focus has been on a cutting-edge, and currently illegal, procedure called mitochondrial donation, a form of IVF which would allow those with the condition to have children, safe in the knowledge they would not be passing it on. Mito has taken everything from me, she says. If I die, at least James will still have a part of me. I would like him to look at our child, and say, You have your mums smile or your mums eyes.

An IVF treatment known as mitochondrial donation could potentially save up to 60 Australian children a year from being born with the condition. Credit:

Mitochondrial donation has been labelled immoral and unethical, a slippery slope to designer babies, not to mention potentially unsafe. The only country in the world to have legalised it is the UK. A report by medical experts into the technologys potential application in Australia is due to be delivered to Health Minister Greg Hunt this month.

This fight is really personal to me, Beverley says. Short of a cure, people with mito should at least have the option of having healthy children.

Mitochondria are microscopic structures in human cells that provide the body with energy. For this reason, they are often described as the cells powerhouse. They are crucially important: if your mitochondria fail or mutate, your body will be starved of energy, causing multiple organ failure and premature death.

A stylised representation of a mitochondrion, which provides the body with energy. Malfunction can lead to organ failure and death.Credit:Josh Robenstone

Mito, which is maternally inherited, usually affects the muscles and major organs such as the brain, heart, liver, inner ears, and eyes. But it can cause any symptom in any organ, at any age. Indeed, the term mito includes more than 200 disorders, the symptoms of which are maddeningly varied and seemingly unrelated, leading to delayed diagnoses or incorrect diagnoses or, indeed, no diagnosis.

Many of these people have been fobbed off by doctors or laughed off by people who think they are hypochondriacs, says Dr David Thorburn, a mitochondrial researcher at the Murdoch Childrens Research Institute, in Melbourne, who has diagnosed some 700 cases over the past 28 years. Most people are relieved to finally know what it is, because that is the end of that part of their journey.

Its sometimes said babies produced as a result of mitochondrial donation would have three parents the mother, the father, and the donor.

Up to two million people worldwide have some form of mito. - Others, like Beverley, who have a less severe type of the disease, will get adult onset, and can expect to become ill in their 30s, 40s or 50s.

According to Thorburn, One of the things that most dismays families with mito is the lack of control they have over passing the condition down to future generations of their family.

Remaining childless is one way to stop the condition from being passed down, as is adopting, but as Thorburn acknowledges, There is an innate desire in many individuals to have their own children. For these people, mito donation offers the very real prospect that the condition is eliminated from future generations.

Mitochondrial replacement is a highly specialised procedure, requiring a level of manual dexterity sufficient to manipulate a womans egg, which is roughly the width of a human hair. Within that egg is a nucleus, where a persons genes are located, and the cytoplasm, the jelly-like substance that surrounds it. Mitochondria are found in the cytoplasm.

Mitochondrial replacement involves taking a donor females healthy egg, removing its nucleus and replacing it with the nucleus of the woman affected by mitochondrial disease, but whose nucleus is healthy. The egg is then fertilised using her partners sperm. (Another option is to fertilise the egg first, and then swap the nucleus.) The resulting embryo is then implanted into the mother.

Researcher David Thorburn: "Mito donation offers the very real prospect that the condition is eliminated from future generations."Credit:Josh Robenstone

Since more than 99.9 per cent of our genes are found in the eggs nucleus, which remains unaffected, the procedure will have no impact on the childs height, hair colour or mannerisms. Despite that, its sometimes said that babies produced as a result of mitochondrial donation would have three parents the mother, the father, and the donor.

The technology has been tested in mice for more than 30 years, but only since 2009 has research been done on human embryos, mainly in the UK. Almost from the start, the research was subject to sensational headlines about scientists playing God, and the possibility of genetic engineering, with much of the hysteria being fuelled by anti-abortion groups. The Catholic Church described it as a further step in commodification of the human embryo and a failure to respect new individual human lives.

In 2012, the Human Genetics Alert, an independent watchdog group in London, wrote a paper comparing any baby produced with mitochondrial replacement to Frankensteins creation, since they would be produced by sticking together bits from many different bodies. According to the Conservative British MP Jacob Rees-Mogg, the procedure was not a cure for disease, it is the creating of a different person.

Regulators subjected the technology to four separate scientific reviews, together with rounds of ethical debate and community consultation. In 2015, the UK Parliament voted to legalise the technology for use in humans, on the proviso that it only be available to those women at high risk of passing on the disease. Since then, 13 couples in the UK have received the go-ahead to undergo the procedure.

Its unclear how many children, if any, have been born: the parents have asked that details not be published. Meanwhile, scientists like Thorburn wait eagerly for news of any developments. I know the UK researchers well and have asked several of them, and they are keeping completely quiet about it in respecting the families wishes, he says.

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If there have been babies born in the UK using the procedure, they arent the first. In April 2016, a child was born using the technique in Mexico, to a Jordanian mother who carried a fatal mitochondrial condition known as Leigh syndrome. The doctor in charge, an American fertility specialist called Dr John Zhang, later admitted that he had gone to Mexico because the procedure is illegal in America. In Mexico, he admitted, There are no rules.

Even those who want mitochondrial donation legalised in Australia concede that much remains unknown about the procedure. Its long-term risks can only be understood through lifelong health check-ups, but this is impossible until any children conceived via this procedure become adults. Implications for subsequent generations also remain unclear.

No medical procedure is 100 per cent safe, says Sean Murray, CEO of the Mito Foundation. But we think we are at the stage now where the benefits of the technology are greater than the risks.

One of the issues around safety concerns the compatibility of the donors mitochondria with the recipients nuclear genes. A 2016 study in mice suggested that mismatched mitochondria affected their metabolism and shortened their lives. Another concern is known as carryover, whereby a tiny amount of mutant mitochondria is inevitably transferred from the affected mothers egg into the donor egg during the procedure.

Instead of it being wiped out, the mutation might then reappear in the descendants of any girls born as a result. For this reason, some people have proposed that the procedure be restricted to male embryos only, but this raises all kinds of ethical issues around selective breeding and sex selection.

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Indeed, it often seems as if the term ethical minefield was coined especially with mitochondrial donation in mind.

My primary ethical concern has to do with the sanctity of human life, says Father Kevin McGovern, a Catholic priest and member of the National Health and Medical Research Councils Mitochondrial Donation Expert Working Committee.

If mitochondrial donation is permitted here, the technique most likely to be used is pronuclear transfer, which requires that both the donors egg and the affected mothers egg be fertilised. [This is to ensure that both eggs are at the same developmental stage.] But once the nucleus is removed from the donors fertilised egg, it is discarded. For people who believe that life begins at conception, this is akin to murder. You are creating two lives and destroying one for spare parts.

The Catholic Church has consistently opposed mitochondrial donation. In a Senate inquiry into the technology in 2018, Dr Bernadette Tobin, director of the Plunkett Centre for Ethics at the Australian Catholic University, suggested the process was intrinsically evil.

The inquiry also heard from Father Anthony Fisher, Catholic Archbishop of Sydney, who raised concerns about the moral right of the child to know how he or she was conceived the problem of what he called genealogical bewilderment and the donors right to remain anonymous. He also worried that women might effectively become egg vending machines: The availability of human ova is often assumed when people talk about reproductive technology as if they were somehow there in a cupboard to be used. In fact, it means women have to be used to obtain these eggs. They are extracted by invasive procedures that do carry some risk.

A report by medical experts into mitochondrial donation and its potential application in Australia is due to be delivered to Health Minister Greg Hunt this month. Credit:Alex Ellinghausen

Equally troubling for the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference, the peak national body for the churchs bishops, was the fact that mitochondrial donation involved conceiving babies not by marital intercourse [but by] a technical procedure.

Most of these concerns are redundant, argues the Mito Foundations Sean Murray. We already have a well defined regulatory framework for dealing with all this, he says. As far as the donors right to remain anonymous, we would defer to the appropriate federal or state and territory regulations that apply for sperm or egg donations. In regard to a kids right to know they had a mitochondrial donor, societally there seems to be a preference to inform kids. Its important for them to understand their genetic lineage.

Then theres the matter of consent. The parents can wrestle with the ethical issues and weigh up all the risks, but the only person who cant consent to the procedure is the unborn child. Well, says Murray, they cant consent to being born with mito, either.

The Mito Foundations Sean Murray: "In regard to a kids right to know they had a mitochondrial donor, societally there seems to be a preference to inform kids."Credit:Joshua Morris

Murray, 47, is one of the founding directors of the Mito Foundation, which was established in Sydney in 2009. Mito runs in my family, he says. My older brother, Peter, died of it in 2009 at 45, and my mum passed away in 2011, at 70. What people often dont understand is that even in families that have mito, each member can have different mutational loads basically, different amounts of bad mitochondria. Peter got a high load, but I didnt. Thats why Im still here.

A computer scientist by training, Murray now works full-time on the foundation. Much of his job involves travelling around the country, explaining mito to politicians, journalists and philanthropists, raising funds for research and, most crucially, advocating for a change to the laws.

Mitochondrial donation falls foul of two pieces of legislation: the Research Involving Human Embryos Act 2002, and the Prohibition of Human Cloning for Reproduction Act 2002. The laws prohibit the implantation of a human embryo that contains more than two peoples genetic material. The laws were subject to a mandatory review in 2010, but the then Labor government recommended they remain the same.

In 2013, the Mito Foundation urged the government to revisit its decision. Two years later, it began lobbying in earnest. What we tried to get across was that the science around mito donation has come a long way since 2010, says Murray. Also, the process that the UK went through to legalise it really reassured us that the procedure is safe and effective.

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In the past five years, Murray and his colleagues have consulted with more than 100 MPs and senators. Only one of them, according to Murray, said I dont like this. They have also talked to dozens of industry experts, including academics and medical and research bodies, about the benefits of mitochondrial donation. Most of them get it straight away, he says. We are talking about a technique that will prevent the chance of having a morbidly ill child.

Now, a breakthrough appears imminent. In February 2019, Health Minister Greg Hunt asked the National Health and Medical Research Council to look into the matter, review the science and conduct public consultation. The NHMRC is due to hand its report to Hunt this month. The expectation among the mito community is that he will recommend the laws be changed. Any proposals would then need to be debated in Parliament, where issues around reproductive medicine have, in the past, been hotly contested.

Murray expects some opposition from more conservative MPs, but nothing like the rancour seen in the NSW Parliament during last years debate over legalising abortion. Shadow health minister Chris Bowen has, for his part, said that Labor will support changing the laws.

Mitochondrial sufferer Shelley Beverley at home in Tasmania. This fight is really personal to me. Credit:Peter Mathew

Whether this will help people like Shelley Beverley is unclear. If Hunt gives it the green light, it will take two years at least for mitochondrial donation to become available to prospective parents, given the time involved in drafting and passing legislation, establishing a regulatory regime and getting doctors up to speed with the technology.

This will probably be too late for Beverley. I really only have about a year left to give it a go, she tells me. After that, my symptoms may progress and biologically things get worse after 35. She says she would consider going to the UK for the treatment, but that at present they are not accepting international patients.

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In the meantime, she watches TV, and reads a little, but not too much. (It puts me to sleep.) She gardens: she has a bed of huge white and pink roses out the back of her house, as a memorial to her mother and brother. And she eats. James cooks for me. He lets me choose the best meat and potatoes! Ive put on weight since I met him. She describes James as something close to an angel. He will listen to every problem I have or feeling I experience. He will always put me first.

Beverley started going out with James when she was 21, right around the time she first went deaf. I was so scared that he wouldnt like me as much. I remember calling him and saying I was scared he would leave me. But James is still here. Im very lucky to have him, she says. If I go, I want him to have a part of me.

To read more from Good Weekend magazine, visit our page at The Sydney Morning Herald, The Age and Brisbane Times.

Tim Elliott is a senior writer with Good Weekend.

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Coronavirus outbreak revives dangerous race myths and pseudoscience – NBC News

March 20th, 2020 8:46 pm

The news last week that NBA player Rudy Gobert, a Frenchman of Caribbean heritage, had tested positive for the coronavirus shattered a myth that some of the world's more conspiracy-minded had circulated online through jokes, news stories and social media posts.

Black people are not, in fact, immune to the coronavirus.

On Tuesday, the Afro-British actor Idris Elba, who lives part time in the United States and tested positive for COVID-19 this week, posted on social media about his early lack of symptoms and subsequent changes, how he managed to be tested, the dangers of the disease and the myth of black immunity.

"Something that is scaring me, when I read the comments and some of the reactions, my people, black people, please, please understand that coronavirus is ... you can get it," Elba said. "There are so many stupid, ridiculous conspiracy theories about black people not being able to get it. ...That is the quickest way to get more black people killed. And I'm talking about the whole world, wherever we are. ... Just know you have to be just as vigilant as every other race."

Variations on the immunity myth claims that black worshipers can't be infected at church where a pastor refused to cancel in-person services and false assertions that there are zero COVID-19 infections in Africa to name a few remain on the internet along with other fantastical ideas. The myth of group immunity may, public health, disease control and bioethicists say, provide some people with a bit of levity or sense of control in a seemingly dire time. But the risk of false information circulating in any form far outweighs the value of a few chuckles or nerve-calming denial.

What's more, fictional claims about black immunity from a potentially deadly viral infection are connected with a long history of contradictory but uniformly racist ideas serving the social or political needs of the moment, experts say.

"I want to be very clear there is, despite many claims to the contrary, no truth, no fact at all in claims of genetic differences, immunity or susceptibility, to disease based on race," said Otis Brawley, a professor of epidemiology and oncology at the Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health.

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The list of health conditions linked to genetic variations found more often in specific geographic regions is a short one. Even health conditions that appear disproportionately in some populations, such as sickle cell disease, fall in this category, Brawley said. As a result there are people classified in the United States as both white and black who have sickle cell disease or the genetic trait. But, this pattern is, too often, wrongly conflated with race, he said.

"Race medicine is almost always bad medicine," said Brawley. "So I do not have and, to my knowledge, no one else has, any data demonstrating either racial or geographic immunity from coronaviruses."

While the false notion of black immunity to coronavirus has, to some degree, faded in the days since the Gobert news which was followed by several other black NBA players testing positive as well other absurd notions, conspiracy theories and lies have rippled through many social media feeds.

"There are a whole range of crazy notions gaining traction," said Gail Christopher, executive director of the National Collaborative for Health Equity. "We all would like to have hope right now to counter the anxiety that the bulk of the news is giving us. So anybody is possibly vulnerable to misinformation. We do, all have, naturally, a psychological propensity to cling to hope, but that is also part of what makes this so dangerous."

Jokes may help some deal with the fear of a disease creating massive, disempowering social upheaval, Christopher said. Conspiracy theories may do the same. And the effort to rebrand the virus as the fault of the Chinese (or vice versa), is nothing more than a flagrant attempt to shift blame and deflect attention from a disjointed and inadequate official response, she said. What's more, black Americans are overrepresented among those living with some of the underlying health conditions asthma, diabetes, high blood pressure, heart disease that can put a person at risk of becoming seriously ill or dying due to the coronavirus, Christopher said. Global differences in health care access and quality compound this problem.

Representatives from the World Health Organization have met with many of the nation's major technology companies, and the organization is working with Google to curb the spread of misinformation online.

"The COVID-19 outbreak and response has been accompanied by a massive 'infodemic,'" the organization said in a statement to NBC News last week.

The WHO is also working with social media companies and influencers to detect misinformation and limit its spread, the agency added

"These myths have a track record not just of shaping attitudes but of shaping policy and practice in public and private spaces, in hospitals and in schools, in workplaces, too," said Dorothy Roberts, a University of Pennsylvania bioethicist, lawyer and sociologist who researches race in medicine. "It's not farfetched to fear that now."

Over the course of 100 years, the false belief spread that people of African descent had inferior or weak lungs ideas championed by no less than Thomas Jefferson and Samuel Cartwright, a respected doctor and professor at the school that would become Tulane University, according to Roberts, author of "Fatal Invention: How Science, Politics and Big Business Re-Create Race in the Twenty-First Century." The lungs of black people were so in need of constant exertion, the men argued, that forced unpaid labor slavery was a form of treatment.

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In the 1790s, nearly two decades after he signed the Declaration of Independence, Dr. Benjamin Rush, a respected white Philadelphia physician, and others advanced the idea that black people were somehow biologically immune to yellow fever. Rush did so during a massive outbreak in that city. Black people, Rush and others said, were uniquely positioned to care for the sick, dig graves, and cart away and bury bodies. In the end, 4,000 to 5,000 people died, including an estimated 240 black residents.

Given that history, this month, The Philadelphia Inquirer published a column refuting false claims that black Americans are immune to coronavirus. The city is more than 42 percent black. But the problem of racial myths in medicine remains a part of modern thinking well beyond Philadelphia, Roberts said.

In 2016, a survey of 222 medical students and residents found that half believed at least one of several myths about biological differences between black and white people that shaped their approach to treating pain. As a result, the medical professionals were overwhelmingly less willing to regard or treat the pain of black patients the same as white patients.

And the problems do not end there. To this day, most of the nation's medical facilities use different standards for measuring lung and kidney function for black patients versus others, Roberts said. This, in turn, means that black patients must register more significant breathing difficulties or kidney dysfunction before the most serious medical interventions are offered.

"Any way you look at it, I see no benefit to any of the myths about black physical peculiarity," Roberts said. "They have all been dangerous to black people's health and welfare in America, supportive of white supremacy and promoted low levels of care and concern about black people's health.

"So I think it's a mistake to even joke about it. I just don't find it funny at all."

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HORAMA Signs Exclusive License Agreement with Leiden University Medical Center Targeting CRB1 Gene Mutations to Treat Inherited Retinal Dystrophies -…

March 20th, 2020 8:46 pm

PARIS & LEIDEN, Netherlands--(BUSINESS WIRE)--HORAMA SA, a French biotechnology company focusing on gene therapy for the treatment of rare genetic diseases in ophthalmology, announced today an exclusive licensing agreement with the Leiden University Medical Center (LUMC) for global rights to a gene therapy program to treat the Inherited Retinal Dystrophy associated with pathogenic CRB1 gene mutations, a rare but devastating ophthalmic condition leading to blindness

"We are excited to enter into this agreement with the LUMC, a leading academic institution with highly recognised scientific leaders in the field of gene therapy such as Jan Wijnholds, to expand our leadership in gene therapy. This collaboration enables us to expand our pipeline of gene therapy treatments for ophthalmic conditions for which there is a high unmet medical need, commented Christine Placet, CEO of HORAMA.

Our studies in the last 20 years resulted in the development of a platform for candidate gene therapy medicines for children with pathogenic CRB1 mutations. The main obstacle to test our novel innovative medicine gene therapy products in clinical studies was the high costs of the clinical development phase. We are, therefore, excited about this research agreement with HORAMA team, which is a global expert in this field, commented Jan Wijnholds, LUMC.

Under the agreement, HORAMA will receive an exclusive worldwide license to certain patent rights and know-how for the drug candidate (referenced as HORA-001). In return for these rights, LUMC will receive an undisclosed upfront payment, milestone payments and royalties on net sales of products. HORAMA shall be responsible to bring the gene therapy to market with completion of the non-clinical and clinical studies. Based on current timelines, and subject to regulatory review, HORAMA expects initiating a Phase I/II clinical study with HORA-001 in 2023.

Per the agreement, the parties have entered into a non-clinical development agreement with Leiden University Medical Center (LUMC), led by Dr. Jan Wijnholds, Team Leader and permanent staff member at the LUMC Department of Ophthalmology.

About HORAMA

At HORAMA, we believe in gene therapy to treat a broad range of inherited disorders.

Our focus is on Inherited Retinal Dystrophies with our lead clinical program targeting patients with PDE6B gene mutations, a condition which leads to progressive vision loss in children and adults ultimately leading to legal blindness.

Our team is pushing the boundaries of gene therapy by advancing next generation delivery platforms that will improve effectiveness and coverage of gene transfer to address multiple diseases. For more information, please go to: http://www.horama.fr.

Gene therapy market (source: FiorMarkets and Grand View Research, Inc)

Gene therapy is being developed with an aim to treat rare conditions with limited or no treatment options.

Genetic disorders occur due to gene mutations, which can result in incorrect protein synthesis. Gene therapy is used to introduce a healthy gene into cells to allow the synthesis of a functional protein. Growing awareness and acceptance of gene therapy for various disease treatments are favouring market growth.

The global gene therapy market is estimated to reach $5.5 billion by 2026, while the global ophthalmology market is projected to grow to $43 billion by 2026 (April 2019 report issued by Grand View Research, Inc.).

Inherited Retinal Dystrophies

Inherited Retinal Dystrophies (IRD) represent a diverse group of progressive visually debilitating diseases that can lead to blindness. In patients with an IRD, mutations in genes, which are critical to retinal function, lead to progressive, direct or indirect photoreceptor cell death and associated visual function losses.

IRDs are a genetically heterogeneous group of diseases, with over 260 genes identified to date, IRDs associated with pathogenic CRB1 gene mutations are among this heterogeneous group, similar to the autosomal recessive IRD associated with pathogenic PDE6B gene mutations.

About CRB1

CRB1 gene mutations are a major cause of early onset and delayed onset IRD. Proteins such as CRB1 and CRB2 are essential in the retina to maintain adhesion between photoreceptors and Mller glial cells. Loss of CRB function results in loss of photoreceptors and causes blindness.

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An updated guide to the coronavirus drugs and vaccines in development – STAT

March 20th, 2020 8:46 pm

In the months since the novel coronavirus rose from a regional crisis to a global threat, drug makers large and small have scrambled to advance their best ideas for thwarting a pandemic.

Some are taking a cue from older antivirals. Some are tapping tried-and-true technologies, and others are pressing forward with futuristic approaches to human medicine.

Heres a guide to some of the most talked-about efforts to treat or prevent coronavirus infection, with details on the science, history, and timeline for each endeavor.Were looking at novel medicines, not repurposed drugs. (For more on some of the efforts to repurpose drugs, read this.) The below therapies and vaccines are sorted in order of how close they could be to approval, starting with a treatment in Phase 3 trials, followed by others in Phase 1 studies and then preclinical development. Approval, of course, would only come if they are proven safe and effective.

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Gilead SciencesApproach: TreatmentStage: Phase 3

Gileads remdesivir is being studied in five clinical trials around the world. In China, Gilead is recruiting about 1,000 patients diagnosed with the coronavirus to determine whether multiple doses of remdesivir can reverse the infection. The primary goals are reducing fever and helping patients get out of the hospital within two weeks. The drug, which previously failed in a study on Ebola virus, is administered intravenously. More on the drug here.

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Ascletis PharmaApproach: TreatmentStage: Phase 1

Chinese drug maker Ascletis Pharma is testing a combination of antivirals, one approved for HIV and one approved for hepatitis C, that might treat coronavirus infection. Last month, the company enrolled 11 patients with coronavirus-caused pneumonia and administered a cocktail of danoprevir and ritonavir. All 11 were eventually discharged, according to Ascletis. The company hasnt disclosed plans for a larger study.

Moderna TherapeuticsApproach: VaccineStage: Phase 1Moderna set a drug industry record with mRNA-1273, a vaccine candidate identified just 42 days after the novel coronavirus was sequenced. The company is working with the National Institutes of Health on a healthy-volunteer study that began earlier this month. If mRNA-1273 proves itself to be safe, Moderna will enroll hundreds more patients to determine whether the vaccine protects against infection. Modernas product is a synthetic strand of messenger RNA, or mRNA, designed to convince bodily cells to produce antibodies against the virus. The company, founded in 2010, is yet to win Food and Drug Administration approval for any of its mRNA medicines. More on the vaccine candidate here.

CanSino BiologicsApproach: VaccineStage: Phase 1

CanSino Biologics, headquartered in Tianjin, is close to testing its novel coronavirus vaccine in a clinical trial in China. CanSinos approach involves taking a snippet of coronavirus genetic code and entwining it with a harmless virus, thereby exposing healthy volunteers to the novel infection and spurring the production of antibodies. The company said this week that Chinese authorities approved its planned trial, which will begin as soon as possible. CanSino markets a vaccine for Ebola virus in China.

Arcturus TherapeuticsApproach: VaccineStage: Preclinical

Arcturus Therapeutics is pressing forward with a vaccine that relies on engineering RNA. The company plans to take an RNA virus that has been edited to encode for proteins that will protect against infection and load it into a liquid nanoparticle. The resulting vaccine, being developed in partnership with Duke University, promises a better immune response at a lower dose than competing mRNA approaches, according to the company. The vaccine remains in preclinical development, and Arcturus has promised to start a human trial as quickly as possible.

BioNTechApproach: VaccineStage: PreclinicalGermanys BioNTech is working on an mRNA vaccine for the novel coronavirus with plans to enter clinical testing in April. Like its competitors, the company uses strands of mRNA to spur the production of protective antibodies. Earlier this month, Shanghais Fosun Pharma signed a deal to market BioNTechs vaccine in China if its eventually approved. Pfizer has agreed to co-develop the vaccine in the rest of the world.

CureVacApproach: VaccineStage: Preclinical

Like Moderna, CureVac uses man-made mRNA to spur the production of proteins. And, like Moderna, it got a grant from the nonprofit Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations to apply its technology to coronavirus. CureVac has said it expects to have a candidate ready for animal testing by April, aiming to start a clinical study this summer. The company is also working with CEPI on a mobile mRNA manufacturing technology, one that would theoretically allow health care workers to rapidly produce vaccines to respond at the site of an outbreak.

Eli LillyApproach: TreatmentStage: Preclinical

Eli Lilly has partnered with a Canadian firm called AbCellera to develop antibody treatments for coronavirus infection. Using a blood sample from a coronavirus survivor, AbCellera identified more than 500 antibodies that might protect against the virus. Now its working with Lilly to identify which are most potent. The two companies aim to have a treatment ready for human trials within the next four months.

GlaxoSmithKlineApproach: VaccineStage: Preclinical

GlaxoSmithKline, one of the worlds largest vaccine manufacturers, is lending its technology to a Chinese biotech firm at work on a coronavirus vaccine. Under an agreement signed last month, GSK is providing its proprietary adjuvants compounds that enhance the effectiveness of vaccines to Clover Biopharmaceuticals, a privately held company based in Chengdu. Clovers approach involves injecting proteins that spur an immune response, thereby priming the body to resist infection. GSK struck a similar deal with the University of Queensland in Australia, which is also working on a protein vaccine.The company has not said when it expects to advance either into human testing. GSK is also lending its scientific expertise to CEPI.

Inovio PharmaceuticalsApproach: VaccineStage: Preclinical

Inovio has spent the last four decades working to turn DNA into medicine, and the company believes its technology could quickly generate a vaccine for the novel coronavirus. Working with CEPI grant money, Inovio has come up with a DNA vaccine it believes can generate protective antibodies and keep patients from infection. The company has partnered with a Chinese manufacturer, Beijing Advaccine Biotechnology, and is working through preclinical development with a candidate called INO-4800. The company expects to progress into clinical trials in April and has promised to manufacture 1 million doses of its candidate this year.

Johnson & JohnsonApproach: Vaccine and treatmentStage: Preclinical

Johnson & Johnson, which has in the past responded to outbreaks of the Ebola and Zika viruses, is taking a multipronged approach to the coronavirus. The company is in the early days of developing a vaccine that would introduce patients to a deactivated version of the virus, triggering an immune response without causing infection. Human trials could begin by November. At the same time, J&J is working with the federal Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority on potential treatments for patients who are already infected, a process that includes investigating whether any of its older medicines might work against the coronavirus.

PfizerApproach: Vaccine and treatmentStage: Preclinical

Outside of its vaccine work with BioNTech, Pfizer has put out a five-point plan to address the outbreak, which includes making its technology, scientists, expertise, and manufacturing available to outside institutions. The company has also promised to create a rapid-response program to make it easier to respond to future pandemics.

Regeneron PharmaceuticalsApproach: TreatmentStage: Preclinical

Regeneron has grown into a $50 billion business based on its ability to craft human antibodies out of genetically engineered mice. Now its tapping that technology in hopes of treating coronavirus. The company immunized its proprietary antibody-generating mice with a harmless analog of the novel coronavirus, generating potential treatments for the infection. Regeneron plans to select the two most potent antibodies and advance the cocktail into human studies by early summer. The last time Regeneron embarked on this process, during the Ebola outbreak of 2015, it came up with an antibody cocktail that roughly doubled survival rates for treated patients. More on Regenerons treatment here.

SanofiApproach: Vaccine and treatmentStage: Preclinical

Sanofi, which has successfully developed vaccines for yellow fever and diphtheria, is working with BARDA on an answer to the coronavirus. Sanofis approach involves taking some of the coronaviruss DNA and mixing it with genetic material from a harmless virus, creating a chimera that can prime the immune system without making patients sick. Sanofi expects to have a vaccine candidate to test in the lab within six months and could be ready to test a vaccine in people within a year to 18 months. Approval would likely be at least three years away, the company said. Outside of vaccines, Sanofi and Regeneron have started a clinical trial to test whether Kevzara, an approved anti-inflammatory drug, can help with the symptoms of Covid-19.

TakedaApproach: TreatmentStage: Preclinical

Japanese pharma giant Takeda is at work on a treatment derived from the blood of people who have already been infected by the coronavirus. The company is drawing blood from coronavirus survivors, harvesting the plasma, and then isolating the protective antibodies that kept those patients alive. Its not a new idea. Blood transfusions have been used to combat viral outbreaks since at least the Spanish Flu pandemic of 1918. But Takedas take on it could prove to be faster in development than other therapeutic approaches. According to the company, the therapy could be available to patients in 12 to 18 months.

Vir BiotechnologyApproach: TreatmentStage: Preclinical

Vir Biotechnology, a company focused on infectious disease, has isolated antibodies from people who survived SARS, a viral relative of the novel coronavirus, and is working to determine whether they might treat the infection. Teaming up with Chinese pharma contractor WuXi Biologics, the San Francisco-based Vir is in the early stages of development and hasnt specified when it expects to have products ready for human testing. The company has also aligned with Alnylam Pharmaceuticals to work on treatments that might halt viral replication by interfering with RNA signaling. Virs CEO, Biogen veteran George Scangos, is also coordinating the trade group BIOs response to the coronavirus outbreak.

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‘The genie is out of the bottle’: How ‘mind reading’ will transform medical care – Genetic Literacy Project

March 20th, 2020 8:46 pm

The ability to detect electrical activity in the brain through the scalp, and to control it, will soon transform medicine and change society in profound ways. Patterns of electrical activity in the brain can reveal a persons cognitionnormal and abnormal. New methods to stimulate specific brain circuits can treat neurological and mental illnesses and control behavior. In crossing this threshold of great promise, difficult ethical quandaries confront us.

Mind reading

The ability to interrogate and manipulate electrical activity in the human brain promises to do for the brain what biochemistry did for the body. Likewise, in experimental research destined to soon enter medical practice, just a few minutes of monitoring electrical activity in your brain using EEG and other methods can reveal not only neurological illness but also mental conditions like ADHD and schizophrenia.

Against the historical backdrop of ethical lapses and concerns that curtailed brain stimulation research for mental illnesses decades ago, we are reaching a point where it will become unethical to deny people suffering from severe mental or neurological illness treatments by optogenetic or electrical stimulation of their brain, or to withhold diagnosing their conditions objectively by reading their brains electrical activity. But the genie is out of the bottle. We better get to know her.

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The American Academy of Stem Cell Physicians Recommends a Treatment Protocol for COVID-19 to the WHO – PRNewswire

March 19th, 2020 1:49 pm

MIAMI, March 19, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --The American Academy of Stem Cell Physicians has Recommendations for the Treatment of COVID-19. Treatment plans were sent to the WHO representatives and DirectorDr. Tedros Adhanom earlier today.

The following are recommendations of The American Academy of Stem Cell Physicians for treatment of COVID-19:

For Hospitalized Patients (Based on 70KG weight):

1. Intravenous Vitamin C 50 grams QD (Need to check patients for G6PD deficiency before high dose IVC.)2. Zinc 8mg IV QD3. Vitamin D3 100000-150000 IU Intramuscularly QD4. Chloroquine 10mg/kg bid5. Umbilical Cord Blood - 1 million MNC/kg QD6. Nebulizer with Amniotic fluid derived Exosomes 1 Billion/Kg Q4h.

Please note the vitamins and minerals are given at a higher dose than are normally recommended and physicians should do prophylaxis for gastrointestinal protection and add probiotics.

Non-Hospitalized Patients:

1. Zinc 40 mg BID2. Vitamin C 5000mg/day3. Chloroquine 500mg BID initial loading dose of 1000mg4. Vitamin D 5000 IU QD5. Oral iodine 300mg PO bid

6. Dietary and lifestyle recommendations:a. 8oz of water/hourb. No sugarc. More vegetables at each meal.d. Exercise 30 minutes per day.e. Meditate.f. Sleep minimum of 7-8 hours/day.

A spokesman for The American Academy of Stem Cell Physicians, Dr. A.J. Farshchian said earlier today,"The AASCP members have been working on the above protocol this past week. We have to thank all the physicians contributing to this protocol in particular."

Thephysicians are :

Kristine Salter, M.D.Sunny Kim, M.D.Pedro Abrantes, DPMTom Yarema, M.D.Robert Hamilton, M.D.

This protocol is to be tailored for each individual patient. Physicians from around the world are welcome to contact us, as we will continuously be updating this protocol.

For updates, check The American Academy of Stem Cell Physicians website: http://www.aascp.net.

About AASCP

The American Academy of Stem Cell Physicians (AASCP) is an organization created to advance research and the development of therapeutics in regenerative medicine, including diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of disease related to or occurring within the human body. The AASCP aims to serve as an educational resource for physicians, scientists, and the public.

Contact Marie Barba at AASCP.net or305-891-4686.

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Global Regenerative Medicine Market: Industry Analysis and Forecast (2019-2026): By Type, Application and Region. – Stock Market Herald

March 19th, 2020 1:49 pm

Global Regenerative Medicine Market was valued US$ XX Bn in 2018 and is expected to reach US$ XX Bn by 2026, at a XX %CAGR of around 24.3% during a forecast period.

Regenerative medicine is an interdisciplinary field of medicine that is used for developing methods to grow, replace or repair diseased or damaged cells, organs, and tissues. Regenerative medicine contains the generation and use of therapeutic stem cells, tissue engineering and the production of artificial organs.

The report covers all the trends and technologies playing a major role in the growth of the regenerative medicine market over the forecast period. It highlights the drivers, restraints, and opportunities expected to influence market growth during 2019-2026.

Global Regenerative Medicine Market

Regenerative medicines are expected to have a major impact on healthcare to treat specific indications and chronic conditions. Therefore, a high prevalence of cancer, neurodegenerative, orthopedic, and other ageing-associated disorders coupled with increasing worldwide geriatric population is driving the market growth. Additionally, increasing prevalence of inheritable genetic diseases is anticipated to fuel the demand in the field of the biotechnology field. However, high treatment costs, operative inefficiency, stringent government regulations, and lack of awareness will restrict the global market for regenerative medicine.

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The report on global regenerative medicine market covers segments such as type, application and region. Based on application, oncology segment is estimated to witness the fastest XX% CAGR over the forecast period. Many government organizations, as well as private companies, have made high investments in cancer research and development of regenerative & advanced cell therapies. Global efforts to reduce the cancer burden is expected to support the lucrative growth of the oncology segment.North America is the dominating region in the market for regenerative medicine. The major factors promoting regenerative medicine market growth in this region are growing awareness for the use of these medicines to treat various diseases and rising funding line for developing the product line by the private and government organizations.

However, the APAC is considered to grow at a faster rate during the forecast period because of the increasing focus on research and development on regenerative medicine, various government have taken initiative to treat many diseases with the help of regenerative medicines. The report gives a recent development in the market for regenerative medicine like in 2018, Novartis AG received EU approval for one-time gene therapy Luxturna, which has been developed to restore visualization in people with rare and genetically-associated retinal disease. Additionally, in 2017, Integra LifeSciences launched its product, Integra Dermal Regeneration Template Single Layer Thin for dermal repair faults reconstruction in a one-step procedure.

The objective of the report is to present a comprehensive assessment of the market and contains thoughtful insights, facts, historical data, industry-validated market data and projections with a suitable set of assumptions and methodology. The report also helps in understanding Global Regenerative Medicine Market dynamics, structure by identifying and analyzing the market segments and project the global market size. Further, the report also focuses on the competitive analysis of key players by product, price, financial position, product portfolio, growth strategies, and regional presence. The report also provides PEST analysis, PORTERs analysis, and SWOT analysis to address the question of shareholders to prioritizing the efforts and investment shortly to the emerging segment in the Global Regenerative Medicine Market.Scope of the Global Regenerative Medicine Market

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Global Regenerative Medicine Market, By Type

Cell-Based Immunotherapy & Cell Therapy Productso Allogeneic Productso Autologous Products Tissue-Engineered Products Gene Therapy ProductsGlobal Regenerative Medicine Market, By Application

Musculoskeletal Disorders Wound Care Oncology Ocular Disorders Diabetes OtherGlobal Regenerative Medicine Market, By Region

North America Europe Asia Pacific Middle East & Africa South AmericaKey Players operating in the Global Regenerative Medicine Market

Integra LifeSciences Corporation Astellas Pharma Inc. Ocata Therapeutics, Inc. Corline Biomedical AB Cook Biotech, Inc. Bayer BV BlueRock Therapeutics AstraZeneca MedImmune F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd Pfizer Inc. Merck & Co., Inc. Sigma-Aldrich Co. LLC Abbott St. Jude Medical, Inc. Vericel Corporation Novartis AG Alcon GlaxoSmithKline plc. Baxter. Synovis Micro Companies Alliance Inc Amgen Inc. Eli Lilly and Company Bristol-Myers Squibb Company iPierian, Inc Nuvasive, Inc. Organogenesis, Inc. NuTech MiMedx Group, Inc. Stability, LLC. Takara Bio Inc. Caladrius Biosciences, Inc. U.S. Stem Cell, Inc. Cesca Therapeutics Osiris Therapeutics, Inc

MAJOR TOC OF THE REPORT

Chapter One: Regenerative Medicine Market Overview

Chapter Two: Manufacturers Profiles

Chapter Three: Global Regenerative Medicine Market Competition, by Players

Chapter Four: Global Regenerative Medicine Market Size by Regions

Chapter Five: North America Regenerative Medicine Revenue by Countries

Chapter Six: Europe Regenerative Medicine Revenue by Countries

Chapter Seven: Asia-Pacific Regenerative Medicine Revenue by Countries

Chapter Eight: South America Regenerative Medicine Revenue by Countries

Chapter Nine: Middle East and Africa Revenue Regenerative Medicine by Countries

Chapter Ten: Global Regenerative Medicine Market Segment by Type

Chapter Eleven: Global Regenerative Medicine Market Segment by Application

Chapter Twelve: Global Regenerative Medicine Market Size Forecast (2019-2026)

Browse Full Report with Facts and Figures of Regenerative Medicine Market Report at: https://www.maximizemarketresearch.com/market-report/global-regenerative-medicine-market/35229/

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Israeli Ministry of Health Clears a Path to Allow Per Patient Compassionate Use Treatment of Covid-19 Patients with Pluristems PLX Cells – Yahoo…

March 19th, 2020 1:49 pm

HAIFA, Israel, March 17, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Pluristem Therapeutics Inc. (PSTI) (PSTI), a leading regenerative medicine company developing a platform of novel biological products, today announced that the Israeli Ministry of Health has approved Pluristems request to seek approvals to treat COVID-19 coronavirus patients under the per-patient compassionate use framework in Israel. The Israeli Ministry of Health may approve proposed treatments on a per-patient basis for the use of PLX cell therapy including intra-muscular (IM) administration of PLX-PAD for the proposed treatment of severe pneumonia resulting from COVID-19 and preventing the deterioration of patients towards Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS) and sepsis. Pluristem has not yet submitted any such request for treatment of a specific COVID-19 patient, and there is no assurance that any such request will be approved by Israeli Ministry of Health.

Pluristem recently announced a collaborative agreement with the BIH Center for Regenerative Therapy (BCRT) and the Berlin Center for Advanced Therapies (BeCAT) at Charit University of Medicine Berlin to evaluate the therapeutic effects of PLX cell product candidates for the potential treatment of the respiratory and inflammatory complications associated with the COVID-19 coronavirus.

Pluristem is highly committed to use its technology, knowledge and expertise in order to attempt to provide a better outcome to patients infected by complications associated with COVID-19. We hope and believe that the ease of use of our PLX cell product candidates, and their being readily available, may play an important role in case there is a need to treat large numbers of patients with respiratory complications. Our collaborative research with Charit of Berlin on our PLX COVID-19 program enables us to accelerate the implementation of our cell therapies candidates towards this indication, as we continue our efforts to expand the program to additional countries, stated Pluristem President and CEO Yaky Yanay.

PLX cells are available off-the-shelf and once commercialized, can be manufactured in large scale quantities, offering a key advantage in addressing a global pandemic. PLX cells are allogeneic mesenchymal-like cells that have immunomodulatory properties that induce the immune systems natural regulatory T cells and M2 macrophages, and thus may prevent or reverse the dangerous overactivation of the immune system. Accordingly, PLX cells may potentially reduce the incidence andor severity of COVID-19 pneumonia and pneumonitis leading hopefully to a better prognosis for the patients. Previous pre-clinical findings of PLX cells revealed therapeutic benefit in animal studies of pulmonary hypertension, lung fibrosis, acute kidney injury and gastrointestinal injury which are potential complications of the severe COVID-19 infection. Clinical data using PLX cells demonstrated the strong immunomodulatory potency of PLX cells in patients post major surgery. Taken together, PLX cells potential capabilities with the safety profile observed from clinical trials involving hundreds of patients worldwide potentially position them as a therapy for mitigating the tissue-damaging effects of COVID-19.

About Pluristem TherapeuticsPluristem Therapeutics Inc. is a leading regenerative medicine company developing novel placenta-based cell therapy product candidates. The Company has reported robust clinical trial data in multiple indications for its patented PLX cell product candidates and is currently conducting late stage clinical trials in several indications. PLX cell product candidates are believed to release a range of therapeutic proteins in response to inflammation, ischemia, muscle trauma, hematological disorders and radiation damage. The cells are grown using the Company's proprietary three-dimensional expansion technology and can be administered to patients off-the-shelf, without tissue matching. Pluristem has a strong intellectual property position; a Company-owned and operated GMP-certified manufacturing and research facility; strategic relationships with major research institutions; and a seasoned management team.

Safe Harbor Statement

This press release contains express or implied forward-looking statements within the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and other U.S. Federal securities laws. For example, Pluristem is using forward-looking statements when it discusses the potential use of its PLX cell product candidates for the proposed treatment of severe pneumonia resulting from COVID-19 and preventing the deterioration of patients towards ARDS, sepsis and death, its commitment to use its technology, knowledge and expertise in order to attempt to provide a better outcome to patients afflicted by complications associated with COVID-19, its hope and belief that the ease of use of its PLX cell product candidates and their being readily available, may play an important role in case there is a need to treat large numbers of patients with respiratory complications, that its collaborative research with Charit of Berlin on the PLX COVID-19 program enables Pluristem to accelerate the implementation of its cell therapies candidates towards this indication, its intention to continue efforts to expand its PLX COVID-19 program to additional countries, the belief that PLX cells being available off-the-shelf and can be manufactured in large scale quantities, may offer a potential key advantage in addressing a global pandemic and the belief that PLX cells may potentially reduce the incidence andor severity of COVID-19 induced pneumonia and pneumonitis. These forward-looking statements and their implications are based on the current expectations of the management of Pluristem only, and are subject to a number of factors and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those described in the forward-looking statements. The following factors, among others, could cause actual results to differ materially from those described in the forward-looking statements: changes in technology and market requirements; Pluristem may encounter delays or obstacles in launching and/or successfully completing its clinical trials; Pluristems products may not be approved by regulatory agencies, Pluristems technology may not be validated as it progresses further and its methods may not be accepted by the scientific community; Pluristem may be unable to retain or attract key employees whose knowledge is essential to the development of its products; unforeseen scientific difficulties may develop with Pluristems process; Pluristems products may wind up being more expensive than it anticipates; results in the laboratory may not translate to equally good results in real clinical settings; results of preclinical studies may not correlate with the results of human clinical trials; Pluristems patents may not be sufficient; Pluristems products may harm recipients; changes in legislation may adversely impact Pluristem; inability to timely develop and introduce new technologies, products and applications; loss of market share and pressure on pricing resulting from competition, which could cause the actual results or performance of Pluristem to differ materially from those contemplated in such forward-looking statements. Except as otherwise required by law, Pluristem undertakes no obligation to publicly release any revisions to these forward-looking statements to reflect events or circumstances after the date hereof or to reflect the occurrence of unanticipated events. For a more detailed description of the risks and uncertainties affecting Pluristem, reference is made to Pluristem's reports filed from time to time with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

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The North America cell line development market is expected to reach US$ 3,829.46 Mn in 2027 from US$ 1,393.32 Mn in 2018 – Yahoo Finance

March 19th, 2020 1:49 pm

The market is estimated to grow with a CAGR of 13. 5% from 2020-2027. The growth in North America is characterized by an increase in the demand for innovative products from biopharmaceutical and biotechnology companies, the presence of key market players, and extensive R&D conducted by various academic and research institutes.

New York, March 19, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Reportlinker.com announces the release of the report "North America Cell Line Development Market to 2027 - Regional Analysis and Forecasts by Type ; By Product ; Application ; and Geography" - https://www.reportlinker.com/p05875892/?utm_source=GNW Moreover, increasing focus on advanced method incorporation in healthcare, government, and private initiatives for promotion of precision medicine and massive funds from government and private bodies for genomic research are further expected to stimulate growth and contribute to exceptional revenue generation for the cell line development market in North America.

The medical biotechnology has undergone revolutions as a result of various development programs, business strategies that helps to produce, discover, or alter various biomolecules and organisms through bioengineering approaches. The Biotech Startup Revolution has also assisted in promoting the new ventures holding promising and innovative ideas in the country and supported in maximizing the revenue generation and thus the economic position of North America in the global cell line development market.Moreover, the companies are performing various activities for the cell line development market, for instance, Selexis, Carestream Avacta, JSR Life Sciences has done recent developments for products.In 2019, the recombinant cell line segment held the most significant market share of the cell line development market, by type.This segment is also anticipated to dominate the market in 2027 owing to its popularity among manufacturers for the production of therapeutic recombinant proteins.

The hybridomas segment is anticipated to witness growth at a significant rate during the forecast period.The US cell line development market is dominated by intraoral media and reagent segment in 2019 with a considerable market share, by product.This segment is also predicted to dominate the market in 2027.

Also, media and reagent segment is anticipated to witness growth at a significant rate during the forecast period, 2020 to 2027, owing to the increasing research activities in biotechnology sector.In 2019, the bioproduction segment held a considerable market share of the cell line development market, by the application.This segment is also predicted to dominate the market in 2027 owing to higher demand of biologics.

However, the drug discovery segment is anticipated to witness growth at a significant rate during the forecast period.Some of the major primary and secondary sources for cell line development included in the report are American Society of Clinical Oncology, American Type Culture Collection, California Institute for Regenerative Medicine, and others.Read the full report: https://www.reportlinker.com/p05875892/?utm_source=GNW

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Cellphire Begins Phase 2 Trial of Thrombosomes in Bleeding Thrombocytopenic Patients – Benzinga

March 19th, 2020 1:49 pm

ROCKVILLE, Md., March 18, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --Cellphire, Inc., the global leader in long-term stabilization and storage of platelets, announced today that it has received approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to start a Phase 2 clinical trial of Thrombosomes in bleeding patients with thrombocytopenia.

In July 2019, Cellphire successfully completed a Phase I clinical trial of its lead product, Thrombosomes, a platelet-based freeze-dried hemostatic. Utilizing its patented technology to stabilize and freeze-dry platelets, Cellphire is developing next-generation therapeutics to treat bleeding patients. Standard liquid platelets only have a 5- to 7-day shelf life, making inventory management difficult and can lead to widespread platelet shortages during public health emergencies. By contrast, Thrombosomes have a 3-year shelf life.

The objective of the multicenter Phase 2 study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of infusing multiple doses of Thrombosomes in bleeding patients with thrombocytopenia due to primary bone marrow disorders or chemotherapy, immunotherapy radiation therapy, and/or refractory response to fresh platelet concentrate transfusion with or without splenomegaly (enlarged spleen).

"We are very excited to have FDA approval of our Phase 2 clinical trial," said G. Michael Fitzpatrick, Ph.D., Cellphire's President. "Thrombosomes have the potential to increase the availability of a platelet-based hemostatic product throughout the United States, especially when standard liquid platelets are not available. The product's 3-year shelf life and ease of storage could allow for stockpiling, which supports national preparedness for times of potential shortages."

The Thrombosomes project has been funded in whole or in part with federal funds from the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA), Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response, Office of the Secretary, Department of Health and Human Services, under Contract No. HHSO100201300021.

About Cellphire

Cellphire, Inc. is a biotechnology company developing next-generation therapeutics. The company is applying its proprietary cell stabilization technology to all cell types, including platelets, to develop lifesaving products. Its lead product is Thrombosomes, a freeze-dried hemostatic derived from human platelets. Cellphire's technology has potential applications across a wide range of medical applications from trauma to wound care, imaging, targeted drug delivery, and regenerative medicine. For more information, visit http://www.cellphire.com.

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Regenerative Medicine Market 2020 Demand with Global Forecast by Top Leading Players: Organogenesis Osiris Therapeutics, Vericel Corporation, Stryker…

March 19th, 2020 1:49 pm

New Jersey, United States: A qualitative research study accomplished by Verified Market Research titled 2020-2026 Global and Regional Regenerative Medicine Market: Industry Production, Sales and Consumption Status and Prospects Professional Market Research Report is the most up to date report which comprises the latest trends that influence the market competition in the forecast period from 2020 to 2026. The report presents different market predictions related to market size, revenue, production, CAGR, Consumption, gross margin, price, and other substantial factors. Primarily, the report introduces market demands and the present position of the Regenerative Medicine market.The report completes the value chain and downstream and upstream essentials.

Global Regenerative Medicine Market was valued at USD 19.10 Billion in 2018 and is expected to witness a growth of 22.72% from 2019-2026 and reach USD 98.10 Billion by 2026.

Our expert analyst has categorized the market into product type, application/end-user, and geography. All the segments are analyzed based on their market share, growth rate, and growth potential. The growth potential, market share, size, and prospects of each segment and sub-segment are portrayed in the report. This thorough evaluation of the segments would help the players to focus on revenue-generating areas of the Regenerative Medicine Market.

A number of leading manufacturers mention in the Regenerative Medicine Market research report are focusing on expanding operations in regions, as they exhibit potential business opportunities. The Regenerative Medicine Market report classifies the market dynamics and trends in the global and regional market considering several aspects including technology, supplies, capacity, production, profit, and price.

Regenerative Medicine Market: Research Methodology

1. Primary Research:

2. Secondary Research:

During our Secondary research, we collect information from different sources such as databases, regulatory bodies, gold and silver-standard websites, articles by recognized authors, certified publications, white papers, investor presentations and press releases of companies, and annual reports.

Data collection module is used for data collection and analysis of the base year. The market data is analyzed and estimated using statistical models and systematic market. The main research methodology used for the preparation of reports, including data mining, primary (industry experts) validation and top-down analysis, market overview and guidance, the company market share analysis, measurement standards, and analysis of the stock sellers.

Vendor Competitive Analysis:

The report focuses on the strategies considered by the market participants to gain a major share in the Regenerative Medicine market. Through this, the competitors will get an overview of the competitive landscape so they can make business decisions. Leading players working in the global market are analyzed with their company information, product profile, product specification, picture, capacity, production, price, cost, global investment plans, and supply-demand scenarios.

Regenerative Medicine Market Regional Coverage

The Middle East and Africa (GCC Countries and Egypt)North America (the United States, Mexico, and Canada)South America (Brazil etc.)Europe (Turkey, Germany, Russia UK, Italy, France, etc.)Asia-Pacific (Vietnam, China, Malaysia, Japan, Philippines, Korea, Thailand, India, Indonesia, and Australia)

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Table of Content

1 Introduction of Regenerative Medicine Market

1.1 Overview of the Market1.2 Scope of Report1.3 Assumptions

2 Executive Summary

3 Research Methodology of Verified Market Research

3.1 Data Mining3.2 Validation3.3 Primary Interviews3.4 List of Data Sources

4 Regenerative Medicine Market Outlook

4.1 Overview4.2 Market Dynamics4.2.1 Drivers4.2.2 Restraints4.2.3 Opportunities4.3 Porters Five Force Model4.4 Value Chain Analysis

5 Regenerative Medicine Market, By Deployment Model

5.1 Overview

6 Regenerative Medicine Market, By Solution6.1 Overview

7 Regenerative Medicine Market, By Vertical

7.1 Overview

8 Regenerative Medicine Market, By Geography8.1 Overview8.2 North America8.2.1 U.S.8.2.2 Canada8.2.3 Mexico8.3 Europe8.3.1 Germany8.3.2 U.K.8.3.3 France8.3.4 Rest of Europe8.4 Asia Pacific8.4.1 China8.4.2 Japan8.4.3 India8.4.4 Rest of Asia Pacific8.5 Rest of the World8.5.1 Latin America8.5.2 Middle East

9 Regenerative Medicine Market Competitive Landscape

9.1 Overview9.2 Company Market Ranking9.3 Key Development Strategies

10 Company Profiles

10.1.1 Overview10.1.2 Financial Performance10.1.3 Product Outlook10.1.4 Key Developments

11 Appendix

11.1 Related Research

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Tags: Regenerative Medicine Market Size, Regenerative Medicine Market Trends, Regenerative Medicine Market Forecast, Regenerative Medicine Market Growth, Regenerative Medicine Market Analysis, Regenerative Medicine Market Business Opportunities and Regenerative Medicine Market Outlook

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Regenerative Medicine Industry Market: Global Analysis Of Key Manufacturers, Dynamics & Forecast 2020-2026 – News Times

March 19th, 2020 1:49 pm

Regenerative Medicine Industry Market Forecast 2020-2026

The Global Regenerative Medicine Industry Market research report provides and in-depth analysis on industry- and economy-wide database for business management that could potentially offer development and profitability for players in this market. It offers critical information pertaining to the current and future growth of the market. It focuses on technologies, volume, and materials in, and in-depth analysis of the market. The study has a section dedicated for profiling key companies in the market along with the market shares they hold.

The report consists of trends that are anticipated to impact the growth of the Regenerative Medicine Industry Market during the forecast period between 2020 and 2026. Evaluation of these trends is included in the report, along with their product innovations.

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The Report Covers the Following Companies:company 1company 2company 3company 4company 5company 6company 7company 8company 9

By Types:Type 1Type 2Type 3

By Applications:Application 1Application 2Application 3

Furthermore, the report includes growth rate of the global market, consumption tables, facts, figures, and statistics of key segments.

By Regions:

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Years Considered to Estimate the Market Size:History Year: 2015-2019Base Year: 2019Estimated Year: 2020Forecast Year: 2020-2026

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Hydrogel could be step forward in therapies to generate bones in head and neck – UCLA Newsroom

March 19th, 2020 1:48 pm

A team of UCLA School of Dentistry researchers has developed the first adhesive hydrogel specifically to regenerate bone and tissue defects following head and neck surgeries. Their invention was inspired in part by the way that marine mussels can stick to wet surfaces.

Their research is publishedonline in the journal Science Translational Medicine.

Over the past few years, surgeons and clinicians have begun using hydrogels to administer therapeutic drugs and stem cells to help regenerate lost tissues and bone defects. This approach has advantages over the previous standard treatment, bone grafts, which can lead to inflammation and infection, and which can be costly.

Hydrogels, which are made of networks of polymers, have been found to be effective for carrying drugs and stem cells to targeted spots in the body. But when theyre used during surgeries in the mouth, hydrogels tend to become less effective, because blood and saliva prevent them from properly adhering to a surgical site. As a result, the drugs or stem cells they contain dont stay in place long enough to deliver their regenerating and therapeutic properties.

We knew that we needed a product that had optimal adhesion within the confines of the mouth or else our goal to effectively regenerate bone and tissue in the oral cavity would fail, said Dr. Alireza Moshaverinia, an assistant professor of prosthodontics at the UCLA School of Dentistry and the studys corresponding author.

Taking inspiration from mussels natural ability to adhere to surfaces underwater, the researchers modified their hydrogel by applying an alginate-based solution. Alginates are found in the cells of algae and, when hydrated, form a sticky, gum-like substance.

The researchers tested their new hydrogel loaded with stem cells taken from gum tissue and bone-building bioactive ceramics in an 18-week study on rats with a version of peri-implantitis, an infectious disease that causes inflammation of the gum and the bone structure around a dental implant.

By the end of the study, the bone around the implants in all of the rats had completely regenerated.

The scientists injected the hydrogel in the mouth and, to seal it in place, applied a light treatment, similar to the method dentists use in humans to solidify dental fillings.

The light treatment helped harden the hydrogel, providing a more stable vehicle for delivery of the stem cells, Moshaverinia said. We believe that our new tissue engineering application could be an optimal option for patients who have lost their hard and soft craniofacial tissues due to trauma, infection or tumors.

The studys other authors are Mohammad Mahdi Hasani-Sadrabadi, Patricia Sarrion, Sevda Pouraghaei, Yee Chau, Sahar Ansari, Song Li and Dr. Tara Aghaloo, all of UCLA.

The research was supported by the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research and the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine.

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Cell Banking Outsourcing Market to Witness Surge in Demand Owing to Increasing End-use Adoption – Lake Shore Gazette

March 19th, 2020 1:48 pm

A cell bank refers to a facility that store cells derived from various body fluids and organ tissue for future needs. The bank store the cells with detailed characterization of the cell line hence decrease the chances of cross contamination. Cell banking outsourcing industry involves collection, storage, characterization, and testing of cells, cell lines, and tissues. Cell banks provide cells, cell lines, and tissues for R&D, production of biopharmaceuticals with maximum effectiveness and minimal adverse events. The process for storage of cells includes first proliferation of cells that multiplied in large number of identical cells and then stored into cryovials for future use. Cells mainly used in the regenerative medicine production. Increasing demand of stem cell therapies and number of cell banks expected to boost the global market.

Global cell banking outsourcing market segmented based on bank type, cell type, phase, and geography. Based on bank type market is further segmented into master cell banking, working cell banking, and viral cell banking. Cell type segment further divided based on stem cell banking and non-stem cell banking. Stem cell banking includes dental, adult, cord, embryonic, and IPS stem cell banking.

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Based on phase, the global cell banking outsourcing market segmented into preparation, storage, testing, and characterization. Geographically, market divided into North America, Europe, Asia Pacific, Latin America, and Middle East Africa. By considering bank type master cell banking accounted largest share owing to longer duration of preservation that would attract the researcher. Stem cell banking accounted larger share than non-stem cell banking due to lower risk of contamination. In stem cell banking cord stem cell banking accounted larger share by revenue in 2014 due to increasing number of cord blood banks, and services globally.

Additionally, donor convenience, immediate availability, lower risk of viral contamination is major driving factors for cord stem cell banking. In bank phase, segment storage phase accounted largest share and expected to maintain its share due to development of sophisticated preservation technologies such as cryopreservation technique. Geographically, North America accounted largest share due to high number of ongoing research projects. However, Asia Pacific expected to show significant growth during forecast period owing to supportive government initiatives coupled with increasing awareness about cell therapies.

The global cell banking outsourcing market is witnessing lucrative growth during forecast period due to increased research in cell line development owing to rise in incidence of infectious chronic disorder, and cancer. Additionally, development of advanced preservation techniques, increasing adoption to the stem cell therapies, rise in cell bank facilities across globe, and moving focus of researcher towards stem cell therapies would drive the market.

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However, high cost of therapies, availability of right donors, and legal and changing ethical issues during collection across the globe are major restraint of the market. Risk associated with cell line banking is contamination of cell lines by manual errors or environmental conditions hence care should be taken during storing and handling of cells.

Major player in cell banking outsourcing market include;

BioOutsource (Sartorious)

BioReliance

BSL Bioservice

Charles River Laboratories

Cleancells

CordLife

Covance

Cryobanks International India

Cryo-Cell International Inc.

GlobalStem Inc.

Goodwin Biotechnology Inc.

LifeCell International Pvt. Ltd.

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Regeneron to treat coronavirus patients this week in trial using its rheumatoid arthritis drug – CNBC

March 19th, 2020 1:47 pm

Regeneron Pharmaceuticals this week initiated test trials of an arthritis drug as a potential remedy for the worst symptoms of COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus.

The biotech giant announced Monday it launched a clinical program using Kevzara, a commercial medicine that treats active rheumatoid arthritis, and recruiting hospitalized patients experiencing severe symptoms of the respiratory illness.

"We did something that's never been done in record time," launching a study in New York state "where we're going to already be treating patients with this," Regeneron Chief Scientific Officer Dr. George Yancopoulos told CNBC'sJim Crameron Tuesday.

The Regeneron co-founder and president hopes within a few weeks that results will support findings from China, where health officials tried a variety of medicines to combat the disease as the virus spread quickly. Kevzara is an antibody that could help prevent the lungs from triggering an overactive inflammatory response, Regeneron said.

"The one thing everybody got excited about is something that blocked inflammation. This was done in an uncontrolled way, not a randomized controlled study," Yancopoulos said in the "Mad Money" interview.

Regeneron is working with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority to get the trials underway, he added.

If successful, it could be used as an immediate remedy for patients in critical condition.

"[W]e're going to be hopefully seeing within a few weeks whether this really replicates and confirms the positive suggestions that are coming out of China,"Yancopoulos said. "If they are, it means for the most seriously ill patients we may have something that keeps them from having to go on ventilators or be able to maybe take off ventilators."

Regeneron is working on the clinical program with Sanofi, the French drugmaker leading the study abroad. The biotech companies co-developed Kevzara, which received FDA approval in 2017.

The U.S. trial will launch in medical centers in New York, the state hardest hit by the coronavirus pandemic, and is expected to enroll as many as 400 patients in more than a dozen states. The second phase of the program will study long-term outcomes, according to a press release.

"This could in a very short time give hope to the most critical people,"Yancopoulos said.

Outside of the Kevzara trial, Regeneron announced Tuesday it plans to begin testing a coronavirus antibody treatment on humans sooner than once expected. The company moved its timeline up for human testing from late summer to early summer.

There are more than 7,300 confirmed cases in the United States as of Wednesday afternoon, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

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Here are some of the existing drugs that may be repurposed to treat coronavirus – NBCNews.com

March 19th, 2020 1:47 pm

Pharmaceutical companies and research facilities are working to find new, successful treatments for those infected with coronavirus. But clinical trials and FDA approval can take time, so while new drugs are being developed, companies are seeing if older drugs can be repurposed.

Heres a list of some of the options being explored and why they might be useful in blunting the effects of coronavirus.

Doctors in China have used an anti-inflammation drug to curb the effects of the coronavirus on critical patients, and now the maker of the drug says it is talking to the Food and Drug Administration about clinical trials.

Tocilizumab, sold under the name Actemra and made by the Swiss pharmaceutical firm Roche, is a prescription medicine used to treat adults with moderate to severe active rheumatoid arthritis, as well as certain types of juvenile arthritis.

Chinese doctors have used Tocilizumab to prevent an overreaction of the immune system that has led to organ failure and death in coronavirus patients. An initial clinical trial in China used Actemra in 20 severe COVID-19 cases. Nineteen of the patients were discharged from the hospital within two weeks and one got better, according to Chinas National Health Commission. The drug has now been approved for use in China, but has not yet been approved in the United States.

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Karsten Kleine, a spokesperson for Roche, told NBC News that the drug company is in active discussions with the FDA, as well as government bodies and institutions around the world, to initiate clinical trials that evaluate the safety and efficacy of Actemra (tocilizumab) for the treatment of severely ill COVID-19 patients.

Roche is not alone in looking into rheumatoid arthritis drugs as a potential treatment. Sanofi and Regeneron are launching a clinical trial in New York to see if their rheumatoid arthritis drug Kevzara is effective.

AbbVie, the creator of HIV drugs Kaletra/Aluvia, is collaborating with health authorities to determine the efficacy of using its HIV drugs to treat COVID-19. The company is working with the FDA, CDC, and European agencies to set up clinical trials of the drug.

At this time, AbbVie told NBC News it cannot confirm Chinese media reports that the drug has been successful in treatment as it does not have access to Chinese clinical information. It is monitoring its current supply to make sure current HIV patients being treated by the drug will not be affected by an increase in demand.

Sanofi is assessing the risk and benefit of its malaria drug hydroxychloroquine for the management of coronavirus. According to the company, some health authorities are allowing the temporary use of chloroquine for the management of COVID-19, but there is insufficient data to draw any conclusions over its efficacy. Any use of the drug in this context is considered off-label use.

Based on encouraging preliminary findings from a study in France, Sanofi is looking at ways to collaborate and partner with health authorities investigating the use of hydroxychloroquine for the management of coronavirus.

Remdesivir is a broad spectrum anti-viral medication developed by Gilead Sciences as a treatment for Ebola and also showed success in treatment of monkeys infected with MERs, a different type of coronavirus. It is now being tested as a potential COVID-19 treatment.

Remdesivir is in clinical trials in China and the U.S. at the University of Nebraska Medical Center. There are 20 locations involved in the trial and seven are recruiting for participants, including Emory Vaccine Center in Atlanta and The University of Washington Virology Research Clinic. All participants must have laboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection with symptoms showing evidence of lung involvement, rattling sounds when breathing with a need for supplemental oxygen or abnormal chest X-rays, or illness requiring mechanical ventilation.

The first participant is an American who was on the Diamond Princess cruise ship that docked in Yokohama, Japan.

Those with a confirmed infection who have mild symptoms or no apparent symptoms at all cannot participate in the study.

Emily Siegel is an associate producer with the NBC News Investigative Unit.

Originally posted here:
Here are some of the existing drugs that may be repurposed to treat coronavirus - NBCNews.com

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Visiongain Report: Global Rheumatoid Arthritis Drugs Market Estimated to Grow at a CAGR of 0.6% in the Second Half of the Forecast Period – P&T…

March 19th, 2020 1:47 pm

- Global Rheumatoid Arthritis Drugs Market Forecast 2020-2030

- Biologics, Non-Biologics, NSAIDs, sDMARDs and Others

LONDON, March 18, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- The global Rheumatoid Arthritis market is estimated to have reached $58bn in 2018 and is expected to grow at a CAGR of 0.6% in the second half of the forecast period. In 2018, the biologics submarket held 85% of the global Rheumatoid Arthritis market.

How this report will benefit you

Read on to discover how you can exploit the future business opportunities emerging in this sector.

In this brand new236-page reportyou will receive180 tables and 121 figures all unavailable elsewhere.

The 236-page Visiongain report provides clear detailed insight into the rheumatoid arthritis market. Discover the key drivers and challenges affecting the market.

By ordering and reading our brand-new report today you stay better informed and ready to act.

To request sample pages from this report please contact Sara Peerun at sara.peerun@visiongain.comor refer to our website: https://www.visiongain.com/report/global-rheumatoid-arthritis-drugs-market-forecast-2020-2030/#download_sampe_div

Report Scope

Global Rheumatoid Arthritis Marketforecast from 2020-2030

Revenue forecasts for theRheumatoid Arthritis Market by Drug Classfrom 2020-2030: Biologics Non-Biologics: NSAIDs, sDMARDs, Others

Revenue forecasts for theRheumatoid Arthritis Market by Drugsfrom 2020-2030: Humira Enbrel Remicade Rituxan/MabThera Simponi/Simponi Aria Orencia Actemra/Roactemra Cimzia Celebrex Xeljanz Arcoxia Others

Revenue forecasts for theRheumatoid Arthritis Market by Regionfrom 2020-2029: North America: U.S., Canada Europe: Germany, UK, France, Italy, Spain, Russia, Rest of Europe Asia-Pacific: Japan, China, India, Rest of Asia-Pacific Latin America: Brazil, Mexico, Rest of Latin America Middle East & Africa: Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Rest of MEA

Profiles of these selected leading companies: AbbVie Amgen, Inc. Bristol-Myers Squibb Eli Lilly and Company F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd Johnson & Johnson Merck & Co. Novartis AG Pfizer Sanofi S.A. UCB

Analysis of the Drivers, Restraints, Opportunities and Threats of the global rheumatoid arthritis drugs market

The report also includes SWOT Analysis of the Global rheumatoid arthritis drugs market

Key questions answered by this report: How is the Rheumatoid Arthritis drugs market evolving? What is driving and restraining the Rheumatoid Arthritis drugs market? What are the market shares of each segment of the overall Rheumatoid Arthritis drugs market in 2018? How will each Rheumatoid Arthritis drugs submarket segment grow over the forecast period and how much revenue will these submarkets account for in 2030? How will the market shares for each Rheumatoid Arthritis drugs submarket develop from 2020 to 2030? Which individual therapies will prevail and how will these shifts be responded to? What will be the main driver for the overall market from 2020 to 2030? How will the market shares of the national markets change by 2030 and which geographical region will lead the market in 2030? Who are the leading players and what are their prospects over the forecast period? How will the industry evolve during the period between 2020 and 2030?

To request a report overview of this report please contact Sara Peerun at sara.peerun@visiongain.comor refer to our website: https://www.visiongain.com/report/global-rheumatoid-arthritis-drugs-market-forecast-2020-2030/

Did you know that we also offer a report add-on service? Email sara.peerun@visiongain.comto discuss any customized research needs you may have.

Companies covered in the report include:

4SCAbbVieAbivaxAblynx NV SanofiAdheron Therapeutics, Inc.Akari Therapeutics PlcAlder BiopharmaceuticalsAmgenAnacorAraim Pharmaceuticals, Inc.argenxArtax Biopharma, Inc.Astellas Pharma IncBaxalta IncorporatedBiocon Ltd.BiogenBioxpress TherapeuticsBoehringer IngelheimBristol-Myers SquibbCadila HealthcareCambridge Biotechnology Ltd.CASI PharmaceuticalsCatabasis PharmaceuticalsCelltex Therapeutics Corp.Celltrion, Inc.ChemoCentryxChugai Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd.Coherus BioSciences IncCovagen AGCyclacel PharmaceuticalsCyxone ABDaiichi SankyoDePuy SynthesDr Reddy's LaboratoriesEli LillyEpirus BiopharmaceuticalsFive Prime TherapeuticsFresenius KabiFujifilm CorporationGalapagos NVGaldermaGenentechGerresheimerGiaconda Ltd.Gilead Sciences, Inc.GlaxoSmithKline plcGlenmark Pharmaceuticals Ltd.Hanmi Pharmaceutical Co Ltd.HospiraImmunomedicsIncyte CorporationInnate Pharma - IPO PendingIntasItalfarmaco SpAIzana Bioscience Ltd.Janssen BiologicsJohnson & JohnsonKadmon HoldingsKyowa Hakko Kirin Co LtdLycera CorporationMedigeneMerck & Co.MesoblastMitsubishi Tanabe PharmaMomentaMorphosysMycenax BiotechMylan NVNeovacs SANeuBase Therapeutics, Inc.Novo NordiskOnyx Pharmaceuticals, Inc.OphthaliX, Inc. Can-Fite BioPharma LtdOutlook Therapeutics, Inc.PadlockPfizerPhilogen SpAPrincipia Biopharma, Inc.Protalex, Inc.Protalix BioTherapeuticsRa Pharmaceuticals Inc.Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc.RocheSamsung BioepisSanofiShanghai CP Guojian PharmaceuticalsSpirig Pharma A.G.Takeda PharmaceuticalsTheravance Biopharma, Inc.TiGenix NV Takeda PharmaceuticalUCBVitaeris Inc,XencorXOMAZynerba Pharmaceuticals

Other Organisations Mentioned in the ReportAmerican College of RheumatologyNurses HealthWHONational Rheumatoid Arthritis SocietyUnited NationsUS Patent OfficeEuropean CommissionU.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP)Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)World BankArthritis FoundationCanadian Arthritis SocietyWorld Arthritis DayNational Rheumatoid Arthritis SocietyServizio Sanitario Nazionale (SSN)Ministry of HealthNational Institute on AgingNational Center for Biotechnology InformationUnified Health SystemANVISA (Agncia Nacional de Vigilncia Sanitria)African League of Associations in RheumatologyInternational League of Associations for RheumatologyGovernment of Abu DhabiJohns HopkinsBumrungradCleveland ClinicVamedEmirates Arthritis FoundationNational Treasury of Republic of South AfricaEuropean Medicines AgencyNational Institute for Health Research (NIHR)National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE)Institute for Quality and Efficiency in HealthcareInstitut fr Qualitt und Wirtschaftlichkeit im Gesundheitswesen IQWiG

To see a report overview please e-mail Sara Peerun on sara.peerun@visiongain.com

Related reports:

Global Bioreactors Market 2020-2030

Next-Generation Biologics Market Forecast to 2029

Global Biosimilars and Follow-On Biologics Market 2019-2029

Pharma Wholesale and Distribution Market Forecasts 2020-2030

Translational Regenerative Medicine Market Forecast 2020-2030

Logo: http://mma.prnewswire.com/media/523989/Visiongain_Logo.jpg

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Visiongain Report: Global Rheumatoid Arthritis Drugs Market Estimated to Grow at a CAGR of 0.6% in the Second Half of the Forecast Period - P&T...

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